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Saturday 30 October 2010

Chicken course ... ?

This week saw the first of our chicken courses, although I really must stop calling it a chicken course.  'What's a chicken course?' asked a friend.  'Is it something between a starter and a desert.'   No, I mean  'keeping' chickens ... and to be more precise, a course on Keeping Chickens on a Small Scale.  

I have to confess that I did not particularly imagine I would be providing such a thing until someone asked me if I could help them with some information on keeping chickens.  After all, they said, they had no experience and little confidence and maybe I could get them started on the right path.  Oh and how many chickens should they have and what breed?  And what sort of housing should they put them in and what about typical illnesses hens might suffer from?  And what should they feed them?  Was a cockerel necessary - and what's the difference between free range and organic ... and how do you know if an egg is fertilised .. and ... and ...?  And could they see what it would be like to pick up a chicken.
And so that started me thinking about other people who might be considering keeping chickens and if a course would be useful.  After all, I had some idea about chickens since I was brought up on a poultry farm where various methods of rearing were employed including free range, deep litter, barn as well as intensive egg production.  Then of course there was the chicken hatchery producing around a million chicks a year - and that's not chicken feed!  
Me with my 'tweeties' here on the finca
And here on the finca in Garafia, we have kept hens and reared baby chicks with housing methods ranging from a moveable chicken coop to free range with seventy plus poultry (something of a poultry population explosion!) to our current system of a fixed house with large run.
And so, with this in mind,  the course was born and, as it happened, our lovely guests staying in the casita were also considering keeping chickens and asked if they could take the course while they were staying here.  
We started with some theory which encompassed all of the questions and doubts already raised and of course the guests added a few questions relevant to their particular situation.  After this, we had an on-site look at different housing systems and the various merits or otherwise.  And then we got to the bit they were probably waiting for - meeting the hens and collecting the freshly-laid eggs.
It was a good opportunity to get to know what it was like to be close up with the hens, discovering that they would not only pick enthusiastically at the fresh greens held for them but also gather round to dive into a handful of corn.  And happily, when it came to picking them up, the girls behaved im-peck-ably!
Now we could leave the hens on their own to wonder what all the fuss was about - and eat the rest of the greens.




1 comment:

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